Tyra Banks is surprising some unexpecting students.
25.03.2020 - 00:51 / torontosun.com
Bruce Springsteen has enlisted the help of his famous friends for a new video, in which he advocates for the New Jersey Pandemic Relief Fund.
The Born in the USA singer has called on the likes of fellow proud New Jersey native Jon Bon Jovi, Whoopi Goldberg, Danny DeVito, and Charlie Puth for the new promo, launched to raise funds for the organization amid the coronavirus pandemic.
“These are uncertain times,” Springsteen says in the footage. “What is for certain is the pain, the fear, and the real
Tyra Banks is surprising some unexpecting students.
The local hero is doubling as a useful guide during the pandemic
star Jennifer Aydin has become one of the latest celebs to announce that she's tested positive for the coronavirus.
By Michele Amabile Angermiller
Jon Bon Jovi has been livin’ on far more than a prayer if his recently listed New Jersey estate is anything to go by. The palatial, roughly 18,000-square-foot spread, known as High Point Estate, was put up for sale this week at $20 million and sprawls out over 15 river-front acres in one of Monmouth County’s most exclusive neighborhoods.
LOS ANGELES — Since he can’t pop into the Stone Pony to play a surprise set, Bruce Springsteen will livestream a performance from home that will broadcast on SiriusXM’s E Street Radio on Wednesday at 10 a.m. ET, according to Rolling Stone.
By Variety Staff
Daddy’s girl! Teresa Giudice and her late father, Giacinto Gorga, always had a strong bond that only grew stronger after her mother passed away in 2017.
Teresa Giudice is mourning the loss of her protector and hero. On Friday, the Real Housewives of New Jersey star announced her father, Giacinto Gorga, had peacefully died earlier that morning.
Teresa Giudice’s father, Giacinto Gorga, passed away on Friday, April 3, Us Weekly can confirm. He was 76.
When you grow up in New Jersey, you get used to knowing you're striking distance from the center of the world and a punchline at the same time. At any given moment, wherever you are in the Garden State, you're never much more than a two-hour trip from New York City.
Whether it was the snarky but sincere pop of Fountains of Wayne and Ivy, the ‘60s retro of Tom Hanks’ “That Thing You Do!” or the Broadway fare of “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend,” Adam Schlesinger’s music reached far beyond his public profile. The master songwriter passed away Wednesday morning at the age of 52 from complications related to coronavirus.
Jay Sweet was shell-shocked. On Monday (March 30), the producer of the Newport Folk and Jazz Festivals scrolled through the list artists who had applied for the Newport Festivals Musicians Relief Fund. The tally was long -- and all of the names were familiar. “You think you know how much need is there,” he said, still scrolling. “And then you realize
President Donald Trump backed away from calling for a quarantine for coronavirus hotspots in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, instead directing Saturday night that a "strong Travel Advisory" be issued to stem the spread of the outbreak. The notion of a quarantine had been advocated by governors, including Republican Gov.
The Boss never met a crisis he didn't have words for. In a video supporting the launch of New Jersey's Pandemic Relief Fund, Bruce Springsteen offered hope for